Congratulations to Alone for claiming the 14th play-off slot!
This is it. The final preliminary bout before we head into the championship rounds. After this fight you will have seen all the contestants...taken the opportunity to size them up...and I bet some of you are already picking favorites. But let's not get ahead of ourselves and short-change these final two combatants.
Before we get started here's something you need to be aware of. This final round will only remain open for voting until the end of the day on Monday, September 2nd. The voting period is a shorter this time so that we can get the next round of the competition underway, so don't dally with your voting.
I have but one thing left to say....
Stepping into the ring is our first contestant, weighing in with 494 words of Historical Romance, welcome Lauretta Stiles!
"Will you please stop,
Dianna? That pacing is driving me mad."
"Well, your stalling tactics
are driving me mad."
Displaying uncustomary patience,
Papa said quietly, "I am not stalling. I am reconnoitering."
That stopped her. Facing him, she
waved a hand in annoyance. "We're not on the battlefield, Papa. We're in
your office. In the heart of London. And writing letters is hardly
reconnoitering."
"I am soliciting assistance,
daughter. What do you expect me to do? Charge into Broydon Castle and put a
pistol to your birth uncle's head and threaten murder unless he reveals the
nature of his association with this…McGuire? For all you know, the man was
asking directions of him."
"He wasn't."
"How do you know? From what
you and Elizabeth told me, you only saw them together for a few seconds, before
you took off like a crazed hound, causing everyone within ten miles of the
place to stop and stare. I can only pray that no one who knows me recognized
you."
She narrowed her gaze at him.
"Do I take that to mean you are more concerned with what your friends
think of you than you are in the whereabouts and welfare of your
grandson?"
He threw down his pen. It bounced
off a half-full tumbler of whiskey, before rolling toward the edge of the desk.
Dianna caught it, handed it back to him.
"Thank you," he said
stiffly. Laying it carefully aside, he massaged his face with both hands,
before looking at her. "And I am concerned with finding your son, Dianna.
Which is why I am writing to people in a position to help; a task better
performed in silence. Why don't you go to bed? I'll dispatch these at once, but
do not expect a response before late morning at the earliest." Jacketless,
his shirtsleeves rolled to his elbows, his tie loose and collar unbuttoned and
his usually impeccably pomade-smoothed black hair clumped untidily, fatigue
etched deeply in the pale skin around his bloodshot eyes and humorless mouth,
he looked as tired as she felt.
She and Lizzy had spent two
fruitless hours searching almost every square inch of the Newmarket grounds. With
the sun setting and security personnel threatening to forcibly remove her and
Lizzy, she had been forced to concede that her uncle, like McGuire and JJ, was
gone. It was almost midnight before she and Lizzy staggered into the townhome.
Papa's astonishment over their arrival was only outweighed by his outrage once
he discovered their subterfuge. Dianna had been forced to shout to quiet him
long enough to tell him he could dole whatever punishment he believed adequate,
after he helped her locate her uncle, and glean from him, the truth.
Elizabeth, blessedly, had gone to
bed without argument leaving Dianna to fuss and fume while Papa scribbled. She
glanced at the clock on the fireplace mantel.
Three a.m. Papa was right.
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And in the other corner, representing the Suspense-Spy Thriller genre with 493 words, welcome Sing Sing!
The sun dropped its load through the broken plate glass window and onto Burgundy’s eyelids.
‘Damn curtains! Ain’t worth shit!’ he grumbled as he rolled over to face the wall. Strips of peeling wallpaper and crumbs of flaking plaster tickled his nose as he breathed.
Still grumbling, and now coughing, he threw off the stained bedspread and hung his legs over the edge of the bed. He grabbed a bottle of whiskey—a rarity in times when the dole came in the form of pill-packs and alcoholic drinks almost required the donation of a kidney to pay for--from the nightstand. He unscrewed the top and swished a healthy swig around in his mouth. After swallowing, Burgundy chased the drink with three pills he sprung from a blister pack marked Breakfast.
The rats were out and about this morning, the rats being the scum who lived in the outer sections or ‘the Jungle’ of Tower City. He could hear the shouting and fighting, the sirens of the cops who sometimes ventured this far into the gated ranks of hookers, drug dealers, gangsters—basically, whoever upper society didn’t think good enough to lick the crud off their boots. This is where Burgundy had grown up. He knew its ins and outs like he knew the stress lines creasing his brow and the corners of his lips. This hellhole was home.
The motel room he’d holed up in over the last few weeks was dark and dingy. Blobs of brown stains marked the ceiling as well as the carpet. Ratty, faded blue curtains hung at the window. The bedspread wasn’t any better. The toilet almost always clogged when flushed and he hadn’t even bothered to look in the bathtub, let alone climb in for a shower. The smell emanating from the drain put him off. Still, the place was the best he could afford with the slim savings he had managed to stash away for a rainy day. It was cash only from here on out as swipe cards were out of the question.
Big Boy rested on the nightstand beside the bed. Burgundy picked it up, pointed it at the window and looked through the scope at the dilapidated building across the street. He didn’t have any friends. In Lower Tower City people had pimps and baby-mamas but no one had friends. But that’s how Burgundy liked it. People were shifty, unreliable. They lied. He narrowed his eyes. They backstabbed. He got up, walked over to where his lightpad waited for him on the dinette table, and set his gun on it. He loved the thud it made against the wood top. Big Boy, on the other hand, always did what it was supposed to: blow the shit out of anyone Burgundy pointed it at. As long as Big Boy was cleaned and oiled, it was always ready to roar. Who needed anything more than that?
Burgunday flicked the switch on his lightpad. No new messages.
Damn.
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Now it's time to go to work.
Which of these two sample resonated the most? In the comments below leave your vote for the
winner of round 15 (after making sure you've registered on the WRiTE CLUB linky list found HERE), along with any sort of critique you would like to offer. Please remind your friends to make a selection
as well. Remember, the voting will remain open
only until the end of the day on September 2nd.